TY - JOUR
T1 - Petascale atmospheric models for the Community Climate System Model
T2 - New developments and evaluation of scalable dynamical cores
AU - Taylor, M. A.
AU - Edwards, J.
AU - Cyr, A. St
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - We present results from the integration and evaluation of the spectral finite-element method into the atmospheric component of the Community Climate System Model (CCSM). This method overcomes the atmospheric scalability bottleneck by allowing the use of a true two-dimensional domain decomposition for the first time in the CCSM. Scalability is demonstrated out to 86,200 processors with an average grid spacing of 0.25° (25 km). We present initial evaluations results using a standardized test problem with the full suite of CCSM atmospheric model forcings and subgrid parametrizations but without the CCSM land, ice, or ocean models. For this realistic setting, the true solution is unknown. Even convergence under mesh refinement is not expected, so we cannot rely on high-resolution reference solutions. Instead we focus on intermodel comparisons and use the Williamson equivalent resolution methodology to evaluate the results.
AB - We present results from the integration and evaluation of the spectral finite-element method into the atmospheric component of the Community Climate System Model (CCSM). This method overcomes the atmospheric scalability bottleneck by allowing the use of a true two-dimensional domain decomposition for the first time in the CCSM. Scalability is demonstrated out to 86,200 processors with an average grid spacing of 0.25° (25 km). We present initial evaluations results using a standardized test problem with the full suite of CCSM atmospheric model forcings and subgrid parametrizations but without the CCSM land, ice, or ocean models. For this realistic setting, the true solution is unknown. Even convergence under mesh refinement is not expected, so we cannot rely on high-resolution reference solutions. Instead we focus on intermodel comparisons and use the Williamson equivalent resolution methodology to evaluate the results.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/65549151771
U2 - 10.1088/1742-6596/125/1/012023
DO - 10.1088/1742-6596/125/1/012023
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:65549151771
SN - 1742-6588
VL - 125
JO - Journal of Physics: Conference Series
JF - Journal of Physics: Conference Series
M1 - 012023
ER -